Chasing Down the Science of Thunderstorms

&nbsp

Published: 5 November 2018

Dual campaigns are underway in Argentina, where the largest convective storms in the world gather and grow

Severe thunderstorms are marked by lightning flashes, heavy rain, and high cloud tops. Our understanding of them remains incomplete. Photo courtesy of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

A U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) field campaign called CACTI—Cloud, Aerosol, and Complex Terrain Interactions—is aptly named for its prickly science mission: to learn more about large regional convective storms, including their life cycle—how they form, grow, and organize.

Such storms contribute most of the rainfall in many regions of the world. Yet to date, a fine-tuned sense of how they work remains absent, which results in poor representations of them in earth systems models.

CACTI, which began in October 2018 and will run through April 2019, will help close current knowledge gaps when an international team of as many as 150 scientists will gather off and on at the birthplace of the largest thunderstorms in the world: the Sierras de Córdoba mountain range in north-central Argentina.

The seven-month effort happens from fall through spring. It is during this wet season that the normally arid region east of the Andes receives nearly all of its rainfall—about 700mm (27.5 inches).

Much of the data will stream into open-source archives thanks to DOE’s Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) user facility, which is providing CACTI’s main eyes on the sky, a multi-instrument portable platform called the ARM Mobile Facility (AMF).

ARM’s C-band scanning precipitation radar is being deployed for the first time. Along with more than 50 other instruments, it will sample environmental properties in and around growing clouds that become thunderstorms—including measurements of aerosols, clouds, and precipitation.

The Right Site

Adam Varble, left, and Stephen Nesbitt, right, pause during a 2016 site survey of the Sierras de Córdoba mountain range. Photo is courtesy of Nesbitt.

ARM’s first AMF, known as AMF1, will be set up near Villa Yacanto, an Argentine village of a thousand residents about 20 kilometers (12 miles) east of the highest ridge top in the Sierras de Córdoba mountain range.

These processes will take place virtually overhead, he says, sketching out the unique terrain and where the CACTI observations location fits on it. Uphill flows of air converge into convective clouds just west of the site, then grow over and past the site to the east.

At the AMF1 site and to the west of the Sierras de Córdoba ridge top, radiosondes will be launched every two to six hours to gather data on atmospheric properties.

In order to “tease out environmental conditions that are important,” says Varble of studying deep convective initiation and growth, “you need a site where it happens frequently with range of measurements.”

From October 30 to December 13, 2018, ARM’s Gulfstream-159 (G-1) research aircraft will supplement data from CACTI ground instrumentation. Staged at Las Higueras Airport in Rio Cuarto, a two-hour drive away from the AMF1, the aircraft will fly transects at multiple altitudes upstream (west), downstream (east), and through developing cumulus clouds.

Instruments aboard the G-1 during its orographic cumulus flights will primarily take in data on in-cloud dynamics, microphysics, aerosols, and environmental variables around clouds near the site.

“It counts a lot,” says Varble of what the G-1 adds to CACTI, including data on the shapes and weight and water-ice content of cloud particles and the “cold pools”: convective downdrafts generated at lower altitudes.

Safety, however, comes first, he adds. No one in the G-1 will be flying through thunderstorms.

A Living Lab for Thunderstorms

The CACTI-RELAMPAGO study region is the birthplace of the world’s largest and tallest thunderstorm complexes. Graphic is courtesy of Stephen Nesbitt.

Varble scouted the Vila Yacanto site with Stephen Nesbitt of the University of Illinois, one of 17 U.S. and Argentine CACTI co-investigators. Both earned their PhD at the University of Utah—Varble about a decade after Nesbitt.

It will focus on high-impact weather in the lee of the Andes Mountains, with an eye toward improving forecasts of severe weather systems. Funded largely by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and with support from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), RELAMPAGO will involve about 15 Argentine researchers. The science lead for Argentina is veteran researcher Paola Salio of the University of Buenos Aires.

Weather agencies and universities in Argentina and Brazil are also contributing money and resources.

With a series of truck-mounted radars emplaced to measure storms, RELAMPAGO researchers will track large hail, strong winds, and heavy precipitation.

Borque is a radar expert with experience studying cloud physics and the South American low-level jet stream east of the Andes that transports thunderstorms fueling moisture from the Amazon to Argentina. She looks forward to what she calls “a gold mine of data” that will come out of CACTI-RELAMPAGO.

There will be plenty of binational data to analyze, she agrees, and meteorological prediction systems in Argentina may improve.

The dual campaigns may also prompt her government to invest in more radars, says Salio, including more powerful S-band radars and radars in regions where severe storms happen.

Paola Salio, right, poses in 2002 with Matilde Nicolini from the University of Buenos Aires, left, a mentor to both her and Paloma Borque, and with Edward Zipser, her mentor at the University of Utah. Zipser, who was also Nesbitt and Varble’s PhD advisor, established in a 2006 paper that Argentina is home to the world’s champion thunderstorms. Photo is courtesy of Salio.

Nesbitt hopes for the same thing—“a huge legacy of many radars is to study severe weather.” He also sees the campaigns as a rare opportunity to study how clouds behave and how rainfall is distributed over complex terrain.

CACTI-RELAMPAGO will also deepen science relationships between the two nations, says Salio. “We are on the other side of the world. It is important to have these kinds of ties.”

For CACTI, the most intensive data gathering will take place from October 30 to December 13, 2018, a period that coincides with the peak of austral spring and—the researchers hope—the most interesting storms: all the better for good data.

By design, RELAMPAGO will take place at nearly the same time as the CACTI intensive period, from November 1 to December 18, 2018.

Salio recalled being with Nesbitt during a 2012 campaign to observe thunderstorms in southern Brazil.

“We started to think the storms in central Argentina were more interesting. It was too sunny. We had beautiful days, but this is not what we like,” she says. “This was the moment RELAMPAGO was born.”

Hail, High Winds, and Floods

In the case of CACTI and RELAMPAGO, what Salio and other scientists like are places where severe weather happens.

Thunderstorms are familiar to all because of their heavy rainfall and lightning. Such storms are technically “severe” if they pack straight-line winds over 58 mph and drop hail that is at least 1 inch in diameter.

SGP instrumentation covers 9,000 square miles of flat rural terrain in Oklahoma and Kansas, a region where the most epic U.S. thunderstorms take place.

The CACTI site in Argentina is different from SGP in that it is located where many storms initiate and begin growing—processes that will be targeted by measurements.

To date, Argentine storms are poorly measured relative to their U.S. counterparts, says Varble. They also display larger cloud shields, longer duration, more rainfall, and deeper convection than the most extreme SGP storms—for yet-unknown reasons.

A landmark 2006 paper by University of Utah scientist Edward Zipser and others established that this region of northern Argentina, east of the Andean cordillera, produces the most extreme convective systems in the world.

One reason that CACTI and RELAMPAGO are happening at all was a connection that Varble, Nesbitt, and Salio all share: Each has studied with Zipser at the University of Utah (Salio as a postdoctoral fellow).

Each considers him a mentor, says Varble. “He passed on his love of field experiments.”

In 2006, Zipser’s conclusion that northern Argentina was Thunderstorm Central was based on satellite snapshots that highlighted the depth and internal structure of some of the storms.

Among other satellite-data proxies modelers use to define intense convection are wind gusts, large hail, lightning flash rates that can exceed 300 per minute, and—perhaps most important of all—the magnitude of updrafts (convective vertical velocities) that penetrate into the stratosphere.

The Zipser paper described one “champion thunderstorm” that took place in northern Argentina on December 30, 1997. Its cloud top reached temperatures colder than minus 110 degrees Celsius. Radar echoes indicated the presence of large, dense ice particles at an altitude of 19.5 kilometers (more than 12 miles).

The storm was taller than any others in the study, which looked at more than 13 million precipitating events from 1998 to 2004. As of 2018, says Varble, “it remains the champion storm measured by space-borne radar.”

It is clear to Zipser (and now to most of those in atmospheric science) that north-central Argentina is the place to be for atmospheric scientists who call themselves cazadores de tormentas: in Spanish, “storm chasers.”

A Nation of Weather Watchers

Operations began for the ARM CACTI site in October 2018. Photo is courtesy of David Chu, Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Storm chasers or not, RELAMPAGO and CACTI “are not like ‘Twister’,” says Salio in a reference to the 1996 American disaster movie. There is serious science underway.

However, she and Nesbitt both point to a deep-seated culture of weather watchers in Argentina, where an epic hailstorm (for instance) will light up Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube. (RELAMPAGO has its own Twitter feed.)

Extreme weather stories are “always in the newspaper,” says Nesbitt, who in the spring of 2015 moved with his family to Buenos Aires for a university sabbatical and to polish up his Spanish.

“They’re intense, they’re scary,” he said of hail storms in the region. “Definitely a force to be reckoned with.”

Salio has watched hail clatter into Buenos Aires, denting cars.

Borque, the Illinois postdoc, appreciates severe storms. “You realize that is what you are trying to understand.”

She remembers one in 2006, when she was still in Buenos Aires. “You are in a snowfield,” says Borque. “But the snow was hail.”

In a nod to the importance of social media to storm watchers in Argentina, Varble says the first order of business upon arriving will be to reach out to the Argentine public about the science that is being done.